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Many basic settings can be controlled via the keyboard menus. This has options for common actions like muting audio and enabling or disabling video playback.
To access the full set of options, you'll have to get out your mouse - but you won't have to exit the program. Right-click on the main playfield window and select "Options" from the context menu. This displays a dialog showing the available settings. The dialog is divided into several pages to keep things organized; use the list of topics on the left to navigate through the pages.
Click OK to save changes and return to the main program. Changes aren't save until you click OK, so you can click Cancel at any time to scrub changes and go back to your existing configuration. If you need help with any of the settings, click the little "? That will show help specific to the options page you're on. PinballY comes pre-configured for the "standard" pin cab key assignments, but of course those aren't universal.
If you're not using the standard keys, you can customize the key assignments through the options dialog see above. All commands can be reassigned to any keyboard keys or joystick buttons. The whole point of a program like this is to be so easy to use that you don't need a manual, so anything I have to write down here is kind of a failure on that score. My hope is that you'll be able to find everything yourself by exploring the UI. But it's worth mentioning a few things that might not jump out at you the first few times you use the program Right-click: Some of the more frequently accessed window layout and setup options are available as right-click menu options.
Try right-clicking in each window to see the available commands. Main Menu: When you're browsing games, you can access the Main Menu at any time by pressing the Start button the "1" key by default, but you can of course change this in the options.
The Main Menu has commands to launch the game in its pinball player program, view the game's full details, show the game's instruction cards and promotional flyers, give the game a "star" rating, add it to your favorites, and select various "filters".
Filters: The Main Menu provides options for a whole bunch of filters, which let you select a subset of games to display in the wheel.
This can make it easier to find games if you have a large collection. The filters let you select games by era, manufacturer, player system, star ratings, how long it's been since you last played them, how long it's been since you installed them, and by any category tags you create yourself.
Operator Menu: PinballY makes many of the basic game setup functions and global program options available through the "Operator Menu", which you can access by pressing the "Service Enter" button on your coin door service button panel, if you have one.
Categories: The Operator Menu lets you set up categories, which are essentially "tags" that you can apply to each game. You can add your own categories from there via the Edit Category Names command. You can assign any number of categories to each game. Once you've set up a category, it'll appear under the category filter menu, which you can reach from the Main Menu via the Filter by Category command.
Unconfigured table files: By default, the list of games shown in the "wheel" includes all table files that PinballY finds in the "tables" folders for your installed systems, even if they haven't been set up with titles, media, and other details yet. You'll be able to spot these easily because they'll be shown with default background images, and the raw filename will be used in place of a title. This notion of including configured and unconfigured games side-by-side probably won't appeal to everyone's tastes.
I like it because it makes it easy to see everything on my cab. I don't have to go hunting through my table folders to see what's there and what needs my attention. And giving it the needed attention is easy: just select Game Setup from the Operator Menu and you can enter details, download media, and capture videos, right from the keyboard menus.
Setting up new games was a bit of a chore in the older systems; I find this new way to be a lot easier and faster. But if you think this is stupid, no problem. Open up the Options dialog; go to the Game Wheel page; check the box for "Hide unconfigured games". You probably have some tables that you never intend to add to the game list, such as backup copies or test games.
Don't worry - you can easily kick these out of the list. Just bring up the Operator Menu and select "Hide Game". That will relegate the game to a separate Hidden list that will never show up - unless you specifically ask to see the hidden games by selecting "Show Hidden Games" from the Operator Menu. Admin mode: A lot of pin cab users are accustomed to having to run some or all of their software in "Administrator Mode", meaning that you give the software full system privileges as though it were a core operating system component.
It's best to minimize this, since Admin Mode opens up your system to more risks from malware and program bugs, but many pin cab users just give up and run everything in Admin mode to work around weird problems. PinballY has some features can will help you at least reduce Admin mode usage.
Ideally, you should be able to eliminate Admin mode entirely, but you might have some programs that really do require it for one reason or another. The big thing that you shouldn't do with PinballY is to run the main PinballY. You might be used to doing that with other front ends, but don't do it with PinballY. That program identifies itself to Windows as requiring Admin privileges, so you don't have to explicitly set the "Run as Admin" checkbox in the properties and you don't have to use the "Run as Admin" command from the desktop.
Just run it like a normal program and it'll automatically use Admin mode. You'll still see a User Access Control [UAC] warning from Windows asking for your permission to do this, so this isn't some kind of end run around the Windows security system.
The PinballY Admin Mode. This allows PinballY to launch most games in regular user mode as well. User mode is preferable whenever possible because it provides a degree of protection against system damage from malicious code or just accidental bugs. If you do try to launch any games that require Admin mode, the Admin mode background task lets PinballY launch those Admin mode games without any UAC prompts, and allows PinballY to interact with them even though they're running with elevated privileges.
The idea is to allow you to use Admin mode when it's truly necessary, without forcing you to use it all the time, and without constant permissions prompts from Windows. If you've personally added the "Run as Administrator" setting to any of your pinball software such as one of the Visual Pinball programs , you might want to review those settings and see if they're really necessary.
They probably aren't. A lot of pin cab users try "Run as Administrator" as a basic troubleshooting step, but in most cases it won't help - and when it doesn't help, it's actively harmful, because of the complications it creates for interactions with other programs. First off, forget everything you know about PinballX and HyperPin.
With PinballY, you won't be hand-editing any XML files and you won't be running any separate "table editor" programs. The process with PinballY is more streamlined. You do everything from within the main PinballY program, and you never even have to exit the program and restart it.
Step one: download the table. The first step, obviously, is to obtain the new table. PinballY doesn't change anything about this part. Just do this like you always did.
Unpack it into the "Tables" folder for Visual Pinball or whichever system it uses. Note that there's no need to exit PinballY while you do this; you can leave it running in the background. Step two: find the new file in the PinballY wheel. As described above under Unconfigured table files , PinballY normally shows new, unconfigured tables in its game wheel, right alongside configured games. The new game will be displayed under its filename, since PinballY doesn't know its title yet that's kind of what "unconfigured" means.
PinballY sorts the wheel in alphabetical order, so just navigate through the wheel to the spot where the filename sorts in. You don't have to exit and restart PinballY during this part, by the way! You can just leave it in the background while you browse the download sites and grab files. PinballY looks for new table files every time it switches back into the foreground, so the new tables will show up immediately in the wheel.
If you don't see the new file immediately, make sure that you're viewing the "All Tables" filter rather than some more selective filter. And if you checked the box for "Hide unconfigured games" in the options dialog, that will obviously prevent the new table from showing up in the normal list.
In this case, you'll have to specifically select the "Show Unconfigured Games" filter from the Operator Menu. Step three: enter the game's details. There'll be a new command near the top, "Game Setup". The main menu adds this command whenever an unconfigured game is selected. This command isn't in the main menu for games that have already been configured, but it's always available in the Operator Menu, so you can always go back and further edit a game's details any time after setting it up.
On this menu, select "Edit game details". This will bring up a dialog box. This is one of the points in PinballY where you'll need to reach for the regular mouse and keyboard.
Much as I like the media-rich, button-only UI style for game playing functions, it's just not the right interface when you have to enter a bunch of text. On-screen keyboards with two-button navigation are just way too tedious. So PinballY resorts to an ordinary dialog box here. You should also check out our detailed guide on all Fastboot commands for Android devices.
This is one of the most used ADB commands as it is used to see the list of the Android devices connected to your computer. We generally use this command to check if our device is properly connected to the computer or not. You can use this command to reboot your Android device into the Fastboot or Bootloader Mode. The command is often used when you want to flash the factory images or a custom recovery. This is one of the most used ADB commands.
You can execute it to reboot your device into the Android Recovery mode. There are are some variations of this command for different conditions.